24 MAY 1851

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The revision of the Constitution is the battle-field to which

The Spectator

the parties or factions that divide France now confine their strug- gles. Every sitting of the Assembly opens with the presentation of a mass of petitions for revision. The...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

THE week of " the Derby" is never a business week in Perna- ; ment. It could have been wished that an exception had been made to this rule On the evening when the question...

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&hafts nut( Vrnurtings iu arty:aunt.

The Spectator

PRINCIPAL BUSINESS OF THE WEISE. HOUSE Or LORDS. Monday, May 19. Income-tax Bill, read a secend time. Tuesday, May 20. PinTre Coininission; Explanations by Eari...

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Cht Xattropotio.

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The Metropolitan Local Commissioners of the Great Exhibition of In- dustry gave a dinner to the Foreign Commissioners, at the Castle Inn, Richmond, on Saturday last. Lord...

C4t Court.

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THE Queen held a Court on Tuesday afternoon, to give an audience to Count Schimmelpenninck, the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary of the King of Holland, and...

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Trouturm

The Spectator

- The Harwich Election Committee proceeded with the scrutiny de- manded by Mr. Crauford, and at last struck off so many of Mr. Prinsep's votes as to leave Mr. Crauford in a...

inrrign nia Culnuial.

The Spectator

FRANCE.—The political excitement on the question of revising the - Constitution increases as the period approaches when Parliamentary tac- tics with that object must be set in...

IRELAND.

The Spectator

The Irish papers express a belief that the census returns will show an immense diminution of the population below the number of the census taken in 1841. Belfast, however, will...

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311i5u11auraus.

The Spectator

'The appointment of Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Gore Browne, C.B., to be Governor of St. Helena, was gazetted on Tuesday. Mr. More O'Ferrall, having resigned the government of...

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POSTSCRIPT.

The Spectator

SATURDAY. The debates of the House of Commons in Committee on the Ecclesi- astical Titles Bill, last night, had but little interest. A motion by Mr. The debates of the House of...

EPSOM RACES.

The Spectator

In point of numbers, the attendance on Epsom Downs on Wednesday, the seventy-second anniversary of " The Derby," was the greatest ever seen. The " Exhibition year" at Epsom will...

BIRTHS.

The Spectator

On the 16th May, at Tunbridge, Kent, the Wife of the Rev. Dr. Welldon, of a son. On the 16th, at Geneva, the I.ady of the Hon. Thomas Preston, of a son. On the 16th, in...

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Excellent accounts have been received from the Canterbury settle- ment

The Spectator

in New Zealand,—a despatch from Mr. Godley, agent to the Asso- ciation, dated on the 6th of January, with various enclosures, by the co- lonists and their representatives. The...

ttratrrs and Zusir.

The Spectator

The scene of excitement in Her Majesty's Theatre on Tuesday even- ing, at the performance of Fidelie brought freshly into our memory the still greater excitement within the same...

In the Arches Court;yesterday, Sir Herbert Jenner Fust gave judgment

The Spectator

in the case of Madan versus Karr; a suit promoted by the Vicar of Cam, after inquiry instituted by order of the Bishop, against the Vicar of Berkeley, as lately reported in the...

MONEY MARKET.

The Spectator

STOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY Arrzaaoos. A more than usual degree of activity has this week been apparent in the English Stock Market, and the price of Consols has advanced from 1 to...

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HA.HTLE Y COLERIDGE.

The Spectator

Sin—I have to ask you in fairness to insert a few words in reply to the review which lately appeared in your paper upon Hartley Coleridge. Had that review concerned only Hartley...

So numerous have been the pieces brought out at the

The Spectator

St. James's Theatre since the departure of M. Regnier, and so rapidly are they changed one for another, that we do not pretend to follow them with any- thing like an analysis of...

rattro to tip ehitur.

The Spectator

ENCORES AT THE OPERA. Sin—I was delighted, as everybody must have been, with the performance of Fidelio on Tuesday last. It did high honour to the manager, the per- formers,...

CAB EXTORTION.

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Temple, May 20. Sea — In regulating cab-fares there are objections to milestones, difficult to count while en route, and either a division of the Metropolis into squares or by...

The only novelty at any English theatre is an adaption

The Spectator

at the Lyceum of a semi-sentimental piece, called tin Paysan, produced somewhat re- cently at Paris. Two fashionable young men, who take up their re- sidence in a farm-house,...

Miss Glyn, who was the most attractive personage at Sadler's

The Spectator

Wells, has left that establishment, and has commenced a series of readings at the Marylebone Institution.

While the theatres are exercising that power upon the Metropolitan

The Spectator

public which is vulgarly symbolized by a "chip in the porridge," Dr. Kinkel, a German celebrity, is steadily marching through a course of twelve lectures on the drama and its...

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THE COLONIES AND TIIE COLONIAL OFFICE.

The Spectator

, Sir William Molesworth has rendered a great service to colonial self- government, by changing the venue of the cause, and treating it as a ques- tion of Imperial finance...

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THE COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL ON EDUCATION : THE " MANAGEMENT

The Spectator

CLAUSES." ME remarks with which Sir George Grey combated Mr. Fox's motion on Thursday, for a system of purely secular schools under local control, seem to indicate a...

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

GOVERNMENT BY EVASION. THE one art in public affairs which is making progress at this day, is the art of governing by evading the duties to be performed. It is probably the...

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MR. THACKERAY'S LECTURES.

The Spectator

WHAT are his lectures like ?—good of course, exceedingly worth hearing, but like what ? Well, they are like his conversation, like his books, like him- self ; probably very....

AGITATION BY DINNER.

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"NOTHING can be done without a dinner," is a national maxim which has been illustrated for the use of foreigners during their visit to this country. That M. Soyer should not be...

THE DISASTER IN GRACECHURCll STREET.

The Spectator

ENGLISH feeling, which took a pride in giving plain plenty to humble dependents, in making work strong and sound, and in doing all things on a " handsome" scale, is giving way...

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VISITS TO THE GREAT EXHIBITION OF INDUSTRY. THE impossibility of

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observing a synoptical treatment in our descrip- tions, which we foresaw from the first, becomes more palpable as we re- peat our visits to the Great Exhibition. One would have...

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BOOKS.

The Spectator

CORRESPONDENCE OF W./M.0LN AND NA SON. e This correspondence between Horace Walpole and Gray's friend and biographer Mason, the author of "The English Garden," the " Heroic...

The receipts have reached a higher average than ever. Yesterday

The Spectator

40951. 10s. was taken of the five-shilling fees alone. On Monday - next the entrance-fee falls to one shilling ; and such an enormous influx is expected, that there is report of...

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DEBARY'S NOTES ON THE CANARY ISLANDS, SPAIN, AND ALGIERS. *

The Spectator

IN 1848, the Reverend Thomas Debary was recommended by his medical adviser to winter abroad ; and lie tried Madeira Not finding much benefit from that climate, he sailed for the...

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MR. PATON'S MAXELUIES. * THIS fiction is a novel of Eastern

The Spectator

adventure, intended to describe manners in Cairo and to sketch the history of the Mamelukes towards the end of the last century, as well as to furnish a notice of the Syrian...

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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.

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BOOKS. A Geological Inquiry respecting the Water-Bearing Strata of the Country around London, withreferenee especially to the Water-supgy of the Metropolis; and including some...

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FINE ARTS.

The Spectator

THE BRIDGEWATER PICTURES. The Earl of Ellesmere has announced his intention to admit the public to the large gallery of paintings at Bridgewater House, on Mondays, Tuesdays,...

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"WOOD ENGRAVINGS,

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We have received from Messrs. Cundall and Addey a series of wood- engravings after famous pictures, on a comparatively large scale ; and copies of which may be observed in the...

DIORAMA OF NINEVEH. .

The Spectator

Mr. Frederick C. Cooper, the artist sent out by the British Museum to aid the researches of Dr. Layard, has opened, at No 3 Grosvenor Street, a diorama of the scenes of his...

MILITARY GAZETTE.

The Spectator

WAR-OFFICE, May 23.-2d liegt. Life Guards—Cornet and Suh-Lieut. H. J. T. Stephens to be Lieut. by purchase, vice Hon. J. E. D. A.stley, who retires ; Assist.- Surg. T. Tardrew,...

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PRICES CURRENT.

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BRITISH FUNDS. (Closing Prices.) Soturd. Monday. Tuesday. Weds... 3 per Cent Consols tin 971 971 978 Ditto for Account 971 971 971 971 3 per Cents Reduced 961 961 961 961...

COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.

The Spectator

Tuesday, May 20. Pwaranasutes Dissosvm.—Harrls and Co. Liverpool, wine-merchants—Brown- ing and Rigby, Salford, millwrights—Gelley and Charlton, Newcastle-upon-Tyne,...